Chinese massage parlour offers ₹100 services to ‘exceptional’ women with iPhone 16 and designer bags

A massage parlour in Shenzhen has announced a special promotional campaign whereby the parlour would offer an 80-minute full-body Chinese meridian therapy session for just 9 yuan (about ₹108). However, this special discounted service is available only to women of elite caliber, who possess luxuries such as the latest iPhone 16 Pro Max, luxury cars like Mercedes, Audi, or Porsche, or high-end villas.

Exclusive Offer for ‘Exceptional’ Women


On a popular Chinese review and rating app, the parlour touts this as a special deal for “exceptionally excellent ladies.” For the massage session, which ordinarily would cost around 200 yuan (roughly ₹2,400), a discount is of considerable value.

Also read: Starbucks CEO Earned $96 Million in Just Four Months, Outpaced Tech Giants, and Flew 1,600 km Weekly

The female clients must comply with at least one among 27 elitist criteria to make themselves fit for the offer, like:

Being in possession of a questionable number of luxury bags of top brands.
Working in big firms like Tencent or Huawei.
Owning property in Hong Kong or Macau.
Having traveled to Europe or the USA.
Having over 500,000 followers as a social media influencer.
Founded a respected brand or business.
Hold the designation of a doctor, banker, or another very senior position.
A note from the parlour: “If you don’t qualify, hustle harder in 2025!”

Justification for Offering: The parlour further discusses the selection process: it’s not just for self-gratification; it’s also to encourage people to strive for better lives.
While women-only fitness and swimming clubs are cool in China as traditional safe spaces, the selective eligibility criteria of this massage parlour have aroused some questions. Several social media users have challenged whether the policy violates China’s Consumer Rights Protection Law, which ensures fairness in trading for consumers.

Critics argue that the promotion is just a ruse to make people interested in something so absurd as a 9-yuan discount, as very few people in that demographic are likely to get lured into spending 9 yuan for their massage. They believe the parlour’s higher aim is to attract a more affluent clientele and upsell a wider variety of premium services.

Also read: Alibaba launched Qwen 2.5-1M: A Strategic Move Against Deep Seek?

Earlier Incidents in China
Not this time, but probably second or third, identity-based customer requirements made headlines in China. The Jiangsu province swimming club attracted considerable opprobrium in August 2023 for insisting on membership only for women under 45 with higher education, claiming that “members need to have a high IQ and possess personal qualities.”

The unique policy of the massage parlour has continued to fuel discussions about social stratification, marketing ethics, and consumer rights, while netizens weigh whether exclusivity matters when discussing everyday services.

Related Articles

ترك الرد

من فضلك ادخل تعليقك
من فضلك ادخل اسمك هنا

Stay Connected

0المشجعينمثل
3,912أتباعتابع
0المشتركينالاشتراك
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest Articles